Taking to Instagram on Wednesday, the 23-year-old Australian addressed skinny shamers and assured her 167,000 followers that she does not have an eating disorder.

"Can we STOP with the skinny shaming please?" Malcolm writes alongside her mirror selfie, in which she wears black yoga pants and a low cut red Nike sports bra. "I am extremely fit and healthy and am not in the slightest anorexic. I have worked hard to look like this and am proud of my body."

The VS model, who has documented her preparation for the show by posting multiple gym photos and snippets of her vegan diet, told Sunrise Australia, "I had to start working on what I was eating three months before and then really stepping up the workouts."

Malcolm also conducted an interview with her NYC agency, The Society Management, where she spoke on the pressures induced by social media. "I was very active on Tumblr for a while but a lot of the questions asked essentially were cultivating a eating disorder and I was like, 'I'm really just born this way, I'm naturally thin!'" she says. "I want to present a healthy way of living and lifestyle, but I don't want to be in the position to educate people about something (staying skinny) like that."

The blond beauty isn't the only VS model to face body shamers — supermodel Gigi Hadid has also taken to social media to address cyberbullies for criticizing her curves. And let's not forget top model Magdalena Frackowiak, who flawlessly shut down a reporter backstage at the VS Fashion Show for asking a "stupid" question about what she was excited to eat after the show.